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*Official biography displayed in the DSB IC3 train "Jørgen Fibiger"
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USER'S REFERENCE: KEYWORDS
TO THE BUNKER SECRET PROJECT
ELECTRICITY Admitted that the sun provides with celestial fire, electricity might
be defined as earthly fire, controlled and, perhaps, for the largest part produced by Man. Electricity is involved in
practically every work of art in Modern Ages. (Cf. Black box).
At the BUNKER secret site, eletricity is provided by the historical Hirtshals Lighthouse through a 200 m dug-in special
high power cable, installed at the request of the BUNKER secret society.
ETHER 1) Pharm. A colorless, highly volatile, flammable liquid
(C2H5)2O, having a pleasant aromatic odour and sweet burning taste.
2) (Phys.) A hypothetical substance supposed to occupy all space, postulated to
account for the propagation of electromagnetic radiation through space.
EXPERIMENT Since Nature is not created by Man, Man has to investigate Nature by
means of experiments. Since each new experiment is, at first, carried out only by a small group of people, all
experimentation is producing a
secret (1 °) (cf. fig. 11).
FIBIGER, JØRGEN NIS (1867-1936) Master of Engineering, participating in several
important constructions, such as the harbours of Hirtshals and Hanstholm. His genius was equally employed on the Faroe
Islands, in the lignite pits of Jutland and within the Danish State Railways (DSB). He was involved, too,
in the coast protection projects along the west coast of Jutland and the land tongues of the Limfjord. Jørgen
Fibiger worked as projecting and directing engineer and contractor until his death in 1936 in Hirtshals*.
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Fig. 11
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LABYRINT - für freie Geister, Copenhagen 1993, p. 19-20.
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FOLD 1) Mathematically, the fold can be defined as the simplest possible singularity in a continuous space (as such, the fold is regarded by Catastrophe Theory as the first of the seven socalled "elementary catastrophes").
In terms of topology, one might say that the fold produces an articulation of two
different domains (or spaces), without further separation or contraposition (cf. fig. 12).

Fig. 12
2) Aesthetically speaking, the fold is above all important as an articulation of the
difference between the visible and the invisible. As such, the fold becomes an analogy or a sign of this category: thus, sculpture cannot display the semantic opposition nude/vested without using the fold as a sign of vestment as such. Different epoques of art will, however, produce different articulations of this sign: in classical art, the fold will be governed by the category form/ideal, i.e. the representation of the ideal within the form; whereas in baroque art - the ideal being more or less "absent" - the fold will act as a formative principle as such.
3) Ontologically speaking, the category visible/hidden is one of the most
indispensable conditions of truth; thus, the fold can be conceived as a basic phenomenological property of "being". This explains the philosophical importance of such categories as implicit/explicit (Lat. = "infolded/unfolded").
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FOUNDATION DAY Date (March 22, 1994) of signing of the BUNKER secret charter by the BUNKER secret society, Copenhagen.
GERMANS' ROAD (cf. Tyskervejen).
GUARDIAN Any thing worth of keeping - such as a promise, a life, or a secret - is in need of a guardian. The attempts of Modern Man to be his own guardian, are probably all in vain.
GUIDE Person or object giving hints and indications of a road to follow.
HELLIGKILDE (Dan. toponym = Eng. Holy Spring). Actually not much more than a seep, the Helligkilde is nonetheless a site of noteworthy importance. The healing powers of the water flowing from Helligkilde were experienced for the first time by the horse of the Knight Karl Pølse, the creature having been wounded during a battle between the Knight and a band of shipwrecked Dutch seamen.
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Fig. 13 Hirtshals, 1948 |
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HIRTSHALS (Dan. toponym, Dutch Hartzhalss = Eng. Deer Neck) Deer Neck, referring to the characteristic contour of the coastline). Minor town of Northern Jutland (Vendsyssel), actual site of the BUNKER secret (cf. fig. 13).
1) Geography. Position 9° 53' E, 57° 35' N. Elevation above sea level: 32 m max.
(at Lighthouse Hill, Dan. Fyrbakken). Distance to important cities of Denmark: Copenhagen 445 km (passing through Nyborg, Great Belt not included), 267 km (via Grenå-Hundested (not included)), Ertebølle (via Fjerritslev) 124 km, Esbjerg 298 km (passing through Viborg), 320 km (passing through Thisted), Frederikshavn 51 km, Grenå Harbour 197 km, Hanstholm 142 km, Hjørring 17 km, Kruså (German border) 336 km, Odense 308 km, Randers 139 km, Skagen 50 km, Thisted 136 km, Viborg 144 km, Aalborg 64 km, Århus 175 km. Population (Jan. 1, 1994): 14628.
2) Geology. There are no rock formations in Vendsyssel (the grundfjeld lying several
kilometers below sea level). The soil is, generally speaking, raised ocean bed, thus consisting largely of clay, at some points heaped up by gletchers during the Ice Age. The Hirtshals Klint, facing the North Sea, displays several strata: at the base clay from Elder Yoldia (ca. 40000 years ago), then a stratum of moraine clay, then a younger stratum of post-Ice Age Yoldia clay, and finally, at the top, a recent layer of sand. About 10 m above sea level, a Stone Age shore line (ca. 8000 years old) is still plainly visible. During the socalled "Little Ice Age" (ca. 1550-1700) the coast line was about 1 meter lower than today, a possible reason for the devastating effects of shifting sand during that period. The clay deposits have been economically exploited for making bricks (local tileworks closed down in 1906) (cf. fig. 14).
Fig. 14
3) History. The region of Hirtshals has several Stone Age sites, inhabited by spirits.
However, the genealogy of the present population can hardly be traced back to the original Stone Age dwellers. Previous to the construction of the Hirtshals Lighthouse in 1860 (inaugurated 1863) the community of Lilleheden, later to be renamed after the Lighthouse, was very small indeed. In 1870 there was a handful of fishermens' huts, including the Inn; in 1890 there were 12. That year, a life-saving station was erected at Hirtshals. In 1880 the first pier was built, to be prolonged in 1892 and 1896 to the length of 278 m. In 1919 the construction of a real harbour was initiated, under the direction of graduate engineer Jørgen Fibiger. 1925 railway connection to Hjørring was established. The first harbour was completed in 1930, to be perfectioned in 1936 by the addition of a breakwater sheltering the entrance, as planned by Fibiger (who did not, however, live to see it accomplished). 1960, the harbour was once again enlarged (Western Bassin). Since the construction of the harbour, Hirtshals has been prospering on large scale fishing. Today, the town is an important center of oceanological and other research as well (North Sea Center, BUNKER secret site, etc.).
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Danmarks Statistik: Befolkningens bevægelser 1993, Kbh. 1995, p. 188
Ole B. Clausen / Hans Jørgen Weitze: Vendsyssel, 1993, passim
Historien om Hirtshals, passim
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Fig. 15 |
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HYPERSPACE Implosive geometry, supposed to be accessible at velocities greater than that of gravitation and light (c) (cf. light velocity) (cf. fig. 15).
INCUBATION TIME 1) (Biol.) the time required for the hatching of an egg.
2) (Pathol.) the period between infection and the appearance of signs of a desease.
3) (Rel.) the time spent in the temple attending oracular response.
4) The period between initiation and debunking of BUNKER secret.
INITIATION DAY As distinct from the usual conception of inauguration as "opening", the initiation of the BUNKER secret (at November 24, 1995) will not disclose the content of the BUNKER, but merely draw public attention to the permanent location of the secret (1 °). The secret as such will be revealed 50 years later (cf. Debunk day).
INVENTION Since Nature is not created by Man, Man has to change Nature by means of inventions. Since each new invention is, at first, known only to its inventor, all invention is producing a secret (3 °).
KARL PØLSE (Dan. nickname = Eng. Karl Sausage), legendary Knight and Squire of Asdal Manor (14th century), some 6 km southeast of present day Hirtshals. The Knight Karl earned his peculiar surname through a no less peculiar competition with another nobelman disputing Karl's ownership of a wild boar. A contest between the two parties to the dispute, invoking God to decide, whose part of the boar would be the first to rot, proved Karl to be the local master of meat preserving.
Karl Sausage met with a violent death, though, since he appeared to be involved in
the killing of a priest whose property he coveted. Karl was nailed up in a barrel, with large spikes penetrating his body, and rolled down the hillside of Mårskel, at the foot of which he was buried. Every New Years Eve the site is haunted by the ghost of the murdered priest as well as by the knightly spectre of Karl Sausage.
KATABASIS (Gr. ) = descent.
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